Yeah
I kind of cackled when I first saw him. A pretty boy like that playing āfrom the streetsā in Kingsman. They absolutely didnt choose a stereotype for his origins, but considering heās a Bond knockoff, the chocie made sense.
Fave Movie:- Tough one this, so hereās a few in order of best till last. Star Wars (original Trilogy), The Lord of the Rings, Event Horizon, Wall-E (such a cute film) and finally Man of Steel (best Superman film so far).
Fave Book:- John Wyndham, Day of the Triffids.
Fave Video Game:- The Legend of Zelda (All of the main console games).
If youāre into horror games, or just want to be scared, itās a fantastic game. Or if you want to be less scared, I recommend watching Markiplier play Alien: Isolation because even though the game is scary, he always makes you laugh. My sister and I watch him play it once or twice a year.
I canāt judge it today, but unless I see a ton of growth between going into 2nd and kindergarten, Iām not keen on those being read at 5th grade by mine. But then, I was 12 when I read Dracula and that had some now-mild adult scenesā¦that was 6th grade, so Hunger Games at 11/5th grade is about right with where I was at.
As much as I still have to juggle age-appropriate, itās also a good idea to teach kids one simple thing: āAsk the person questioning you if they already read it. If they have not, then they arenāt the right person to make judgements on what youāve read.ā It should be the first thing they ask, when challenged, even if itās me.
And we foist Romeo and Juliet on 9th graders, as a curriculum standard. First off, KJV English (Shakespearian English) isnāt 9th grade reading, period. Thatās more 12th grade level, currently. (Yes, I was dealing with KJV before 9th.) And the adult themes are modestly disturbing on the surface (like Dracula) and worse when youāre old enough to know whatās going on. ( Donāt romanticize kids killing themselves for love. )Thatās 13-15 years of age, depending when your birthday falls.